On 01/04/10 00:52, dani planas armangue wrote:
> I have noticed that the icons are nice and simple monochrome, but adding
> the color, designers do not take into account the color palette.
>
We certianly do want consistency. But which palette are you using for
this change?
signature.asc
Desc
> > I have noticed that the icons are nice and simple monochrome, but adding
> > the color, designers do not take into account the color palette.
>
> We certianly do want consistency. But which palette are you using for
> this change?
I was wondering this myself. Perhaps dani simply reduced the
On 01/04/10 09:51, dani planas armangue wrote:
> El jue, 01-04-2010 a las 08:13 +0100, Mark Shuttleworth escribió:
>
>> On 01/04/10 00:52, dani planas armangue wrote:
>>
>>> I have noticed that the icons are nice and simple monochrome, but adding
>>> the color, designers do not take into ac
Hi Mark, Jim
Yes I am certainly interested. There has been some discussion recently
at Canonical about this whole area. I know Michael Forrest (cc'd) is
particularly interested in revamping the whole sound aspect. To date
there has been no work to improve this area.
I really think the new so
> There should be a rationale and guidance for the use of the various
> colours. For example, red is clearly an alert colour, as is orange. When
> would one use red and when orange? Both indicate a caution or warning.
> Green indicates something that one should be aware of that is NOT a
> warning
Hello,
There are different sorts (6, if my brain does not fail) of "daltonism", that
more affects men than women. ~8% of men have some sort of color perception
deficiency, mostly affecting the perception of green, but red and blue are also
affected for some people. Before my current IT profess
On Thu, 2010-04-01 at 10:02 +0100, Mark Shuttleworth wrote:
> There should be a rationale and guidance for the use of the various
> colours. For example, red is clearly an alert colour, as is orange. When
> would one use red and when orange? Both indicate a caution or warning.
> Green indicates so
On 1 April 2010 10:52, Thorsten Wilms wrote:
> On Thu, 2010-04-01 at 10:02 +0100, Mark Shuttleworth wrote:
>
>> There should be a rationale and guidance for the use of the various
>> colours. For example, red is clearly an alert colour, as is orange. When
>> would one use red and when orange? Both
Interesting ideas. Something similar I've seen is in Mac OS X where
document-based application windows have little icon in the window titlebar
that represents the underlying file. You can drag this icon and drop it on
an application icon in the Dock to open that file in another application,
for exa
I don't see why some of the initial footwork can't be started now. The
individuals hosting the contest could tell the us the time frames
involved in turn around. You can target it to a release based on those
numbers.
I'll do some initial contacts. Some additional info would be helpful:
What m
Not permission, approval.
If you are going to create a contest concept, there needs to be some
small possibility that their creations would make it into the distro.
Without Canonical's blessing, the best I could offer was a personal PPA
that might go ignored.
Not exactly an exciting prize. :/
On 01/04/10 10:11, Conscious User wrote:
>
>> There should be a rationale and guidance for the use of the various
>> colours. For example, red is clearly an alert colour, as is orange. When
>> would one use red and when orange? Both indicate a caution or warning.
>> Green indicates something tha
On 1 April 2010 11:06, Luke Benstead wrote:
> On 1 April 2010 10:52, Thorsten Wilms wrote:
> > On Thu, 2010-04-01 at 10:02 +0100, Mark Shuttleworth wrote:
> >
> >> There should be a rationale and guidance for the use of the various
> >> colours. For example, red is clearly an alert colour, as is
On Thu, 2010-04-01 at 13:38 +0100, Jan-Christoph Borchardt wrote:
>
> Blue = Information (e.g new mail)
+1
Blue is used for informational road signs in the US as well. I agree
with trying to map these colors to existing traffic paradigms. It's
gives a solid point of reference.
Though I support it; this point was originally made by Luke Benstead, not by
me. :)
On 1 April 2010 14:23, Jim Rorie wrote:
> On Thu, 2010-04-01 at 13:38 +0100, Jan-Christoph Borchardt wrote:
>
> >
> > Blue = Information (e.g new mail)
>
> +1
> Blue is used for informational road signs i
On Thu, 2010-04-01 at 07:48 -0400, Jim Rorie wrote:
> If you are going to create a contest concept, there needs to be some
> small possibility that their creations would make it into the distro.
> Without Canonical's blessing, the best I could offer was a personal
> PPA
> that might go ignored.
>
On Thu, Apr 1, 2010 at 3:21 PM, Martin Owens wrote:
> On Thu, 2010-04-01 at 07:48 -0400, Jim Rorie wrote:
>> If you are going to create a contest concept, there needs to be some
>> small possibility that their creations would make it into the distro.
>> Without Canonical's blessing, the best I cou
On Thu, Apr 1, 2010 at 12:40 PM, Jim Rorie wrote:
> What media licenses are compatible with an Ubuntu distro?
> http://www.ubuntu.com/community/ubuntustory/licensing doesn't
> specifically mention media, but then again IANAL.
Most of the current icon and theme work seems to be distributed under
t
Hi guys,
I will get back to you early next week once I have a chance to have a
word with Michael.
Good w/end folks,
Conor
On 01/04/10 16:38, Andrew SB wrote:
On Thu, Apr 1, 2010 at 12:40 PM, Jim Rorie wrote:
What media licenses are compatible with an Ubuntu distro?
http://www.ubuntu.
I don't know how hard it would be to implement this, but I support
this idea 100%. I think investing some time in thinking if/how this
could be done is a very worthy task. Would solve a lot of "what if"
scenarios faced by the current indicators and would make indicator
acceptance among the communi
On Thu, Apr 1, 2010 at 6:30 AM, David Siegel wrote:
> Interesting ideas. Something similar I've seen is in Mac OS X where
> document-based application windows have little icon in the window titlebar
> that represents the underlying file. You can drag this icon and drop it on
> an application icon
On 01/04/10 14:23, Jim Rorie wrote:
> On Thu, 2010-04-01 at 13:38 +0100, Jan-Christoph Borchardt wrote:
>
>
>>
>> Blue = Information (e.g new mail)
>>
> +1
> Blue is used for informational road signs in the US as well. I agree
> with trying to map these colors to existing
On 01/04/10 12:48, Jim Rorie wrote:
> Not permission, approval.
>
> If you are going to create a contest concept, there needs to be some
> small possibility that their creations would make it into the distro.
> Without Canonical's blessing, the best I could offer was a personal PPA
> that might go
i made a message-new icon in blue. the atachment shows that i'm inspired
by information blue.
hope you like
--
<>
icon.tar.gz
Description: application/compressed-tar
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On Thu, 2010-04-01 at 16:16 -0400, David Regev wrote:
> These are just some preliminary ideas, but I think they demonstrate a
> compelling path that could be taken if Ubuntu introduced its own
> answer to the Mac’s proxy icon. This path leads to a more
> object-centric (or document-centric) Deskt
On Thu, 2010-04-01 at 20:16 +0200, dani planas armangue wrote:
> many users would like to change the default applications of our applet
> indicators. use thunderbird instead of evolution.
> Currently, this function is very poor. but it is very easy to fix.
> ubuntu have an application to administer
I support that... BTW, the colour code used in aeronautics (at least at
Airbus) is the same : red = warning (semantic : be very careful,
important problem, risk of injury/death) ; orange = caution (semantic
: be careful, problem, risk of hardware damage or operational). green =
ok (eventhough , a
What is the intent ? Having a permanent icon with two states (no new
mail / there's new mail) or having no icon when there's no new mail and
the icon you sent when there's new mail ?
dani planas armangue a écrit :
> i made a message-new icon in blue. the atachment shows that i'm inspired
> by inf
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